Economic significance
- Related Topics:
- delta
- meander
- streambed
- arroyo
- chute, or Cutoff
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Alluvial fans are important for a variety of practical reasons. In some cases, very porous and permeable fan deposits are the primary source of groundwater, which is used for irrigation and for water supply. This is especially true in arid or semiarid climates. Wet fans are known to have economic significance because their process mechanics tend to concentrate heavy mineral particles in placer deposits. As discussed above, experimental work on wet fans shows that water tends to spread as a sheet near the fan head, but flow down the fan is subdivided into many braided channels that shift their position laterally. This flow pattern is periodically interrupted by fan-head trenching. Therefore, as noted both in nature and in experimental flume studies, wet fans grow progressively with time, but processes producing alternating trenching and filling at the fan head tend to rework and distribute the sediment down the fan. Experimental studies in the United States have shown that heavy minerals derived from a source area are preferentially concentrated in the area of the fan head by repeated trenching and filling. The concentration is great enough to expect economic placer deposits to develop at the fan head and at the base of backfilled channels.
Perhaps the classic example of the connection between wet-fan processes and the concentration of valuable metals is the Witwatersrand Basin in South Africa, which ranks as one of the greatest gold-producing areas of the world. Although the six major goldfields in the basin and their sedimentary deposits are not entirely fluvial, gold seems to be concentrated in ancient fan deposits from the source areas of granite that originally contained the gold. Evidence suggests that each of these fields is associated with a wet fan that developed where a large river discharged from the source rocks.
Deltas
The most important landform produced where a river enters a body of standing water is known as a delta. The term is normally applied to a depositional plain formed by a river at its mouth, with the implication that sediment accumulation at this position results in an irregular progradation of the shoreline. This surface feature was first recognized and named by the ancient Greek historian Herodotus, who noted that sediment accumulated at the mouth of the Nile River resembled the Greek letter Δ (delta). Even though a large number of modern deltas have this triangular form, many display a variety of sizes and shapes that depend on a number of environmental factors. Thus, the term now has little, if any, shape connotation. Deltas, in fact, exhibit tremendous variation in their morphological and sedimentologic characteristics and also in their mode of origin. Most of the variation results from (1) characteristics within the drainage basin that provides the sediment (e.g., climate, lithology, tectonic stability, and basin size), (2) properties of the transporting agent, such as river slope, velocity, discharge, and sediment size, and (3) energy that exists along the shoreline, including such factors as wave characteristics, longitudinal currents, and tidal range. The shoreline zone, therefore, becomes the battleground between variable amounts and sizes of sediment delivered to the river mouth and the energy of the ocean waters at that site. The balance between these two factors determines whether accumulation of the river-borne sediment will occur or whether ocean processes will disperse the sediment or prevent its deposition. The combination of these numerous variables tends to create deltas that occur in a complete spectrum of form and depositional style.
Deltas are distributed over all portions of the Earth’s surface. They form along the coasts of every landmass and occur in all climatic regimes and geologic settings. The largest deltas of the world are those created by major river systems draining regions that are subcontinental in size and yield abundant sediment from the watershed.
Classification of deltas
Deltas come in a multitude of plan-view shapes, as their characteristics are determined by the balance between the energy and sediment load of a fluvial system and the dynamics of the ocean. Various ways of classifying deltas have been devised. One of the more widely used schemes is based on deltaic form as it reflects controlling energy factors. This scheme divides deltas into two principal classes: high-constructive and high-destructive.
High-constructive deltas develop when fluvial action and depositional process dominate the system. These deltas usually occur in either of two forms. One type, known as elongate, is represented most clearly by the modern bird-foot delta of the Mississippi River. The other, called lobate, is exemplified by the older Holocene deltas of the Mississippi River system. Both of these high-constructive types have a large sediment supply relative to the marine processes that tend to disperse sediment along the shoreline. Normally, elongate deltas have a higher mud content than lobate deltas and tend to subside rather rapidly when they become inactive.
High-destructive deltas form where the shoreline energy is high and much of the sediment delivered by the river is reworked by wave action or longshore currents before it is finally deposited. Deltas formed by rivers such as the Nile and the Rhône have been classified as wave-dominated. In this class of high-destructive delta, sediment is finally deposited as arcuate sand barriers near the mouth of the river. In another subtype, called tide-dominated, tidal currents mold the sediment into sandy units that tend to radiate in a linear pattern from the river mouth. In such a delta, muds and silts are deposited inland of the linear sands, and extensive tidal flats or mangrove swamps characteristically develop in that zone.
Considerable attention has been given to deltas that are composed of very coarse deposits—those of sand and gravel. Deltas developing from this type of material are commonly classified as either fan deltas or braid deltas. A fan delta is a depositional feature that is formed where an alluvial fan develops directly in a body of standing water from some adjacent highland. A braid delta is a coarse-grained delta that develops by progradation of a braided fluvial system into a body of standing water. The two are related by the fact that they are composed primarily of very coarse sediment; however, they differ in that braid deltas result from well-defined, highly channelized braided rivers that are deeper and have more sustained flow than streams which develop alluvial fans. In addition, the braided system that ultimately forms the braid delta may have its source far removed from the body of standing water and may in fact consist of large alluvial plains rather than the restricted areal and longitudinal extent associated with alluvial fans.